QUT Digital Repository: http://eprints.qut.edu.au/ Moore, Keith (2005) Embracing the Make-believe — The Making of Surfers Paradise. Australian Studies 18(1):pp. 187-210. © Copyright 2005 British Australian Studies Association 7 Embracing the Make-believe – The Making of Surfers Paradise KEITH MOORE School of Humanities and Human Services, Carseldine Campus – Queensland University of Technology, Beams Road, Carseldine, Queensland 4034, Australia. [email protected] A name can create an image that can have a powerful determining effect on an eventual outcome. In 1917, Real Estate Agent Thor Jensen decided that the name ‘Surfers Paradise’ could conjure the image of a beachside ‘Shangri-la’ in the minds of Australians. Together with Arthur Blackwood, he bought virtually uninhabited coastal land overlooking the Pacific Ocean at Elston, to the south of Southport, and sold it as ‘The Surfers Paradise Estate’. Opening a hotel a short distance from the foreshore eight years later, James Cavill embraced Jensen’s vision by naming his establishment ‘The Surfers Paradise Hotel’. Other entrepreneurs joined Cavill in catering for tourists and by the mid-1950s, the price of land at Surfers Paradise had gone ‘sky high’. The excitement continued with high-rise apartments and international-standard tourist hotels replacing much of the low-set accommodation erected a decade earlier. In commenting in 1988 that envy existed over the way Surfers Paradise had triumphed over other Gold Coast locations by possessing such a ‘promotable’ title, historian Alexander McRobbie recognised the locality’s unassailable position. Clearly, ‘Elston’ Australian Studies, Vol. 18, No. 1, Summer 2003, pp. 187-210 (issued in 2005) Published by the BRITISH AUSTRALIAN STUDIES ASSOCIATION 188 AUSTRALIAN STUDIES could not have captured the public’s imagination as a tourist destination in the way that Surfers Paradise had. Keywords: Surfers Paradise, Queensland, Gold Coast, Tourism, Beach, Semiotics Place names create traditions, assert powerful rights over areas and have significant implications in determining outcomes, Tim Bonyhady explained in Words for Country — Landscape and Language in Australia.1 Although Bonyhady did not refer to Queensland’s Surfers Paradise, entrepreneurs have successfully capitalised upon the name of this seaside location to attract tourists for almost eighty years. As Brisbane’s Courier-Mail argued in January 2004, most people saw the Gold Coast, and Surfers Paradise in particular, as ‘a glitzy and glamorous tourist destination’ that existed ‘primarily for the benefit of holidaymakers enjoying the sun, sand, surf and shopping’.2 Almost from its inception, Surfers Paradise attracted greater tourist numbers than nearby Gold Coast beaches despite the surf at many of these rival locations being safer. This largely occurred through the shrewd commercialisation of its highly marketable name. As Surfers resident and historian Alexander McRobbie elaborated in 1988, there continued to be considerable resentment among residents of other Gold Coast resorts over the way Surfers Paradise [had been] able to ‘steal a march’ on older-established resorts [such as Southport and Coolangatta] by gaining such a promotable name.3 In 1970, John Hallows explained: ‘the image of eternal sun, sand, surf and space figures largely … in the conceptual bases in which Australians … organise their attitudes’.4 Leonie Huntsman agreed, reflecting more than thirty years later that while ‘Australians are supposed to love the bush, more and more they prefer to live on the EMBRACING THE MAKE-BELIEVE 189 coast’, and for those unable to live on the coast, a seaside holiday was the next best alternative.5 Robert Drewe elaborated further: ‘many if not most Australians … see the beach in a sensual and nostalgic light. … The beach is not only a regular summer pleasure and balm, but an idée fixe which fulfils an almost ceremonial need at each critical physical and emotional stage’ of their lives.6 Moreover, when discussing Max Dupain’s classic 1937 photograph the Sunbaker in 2003, Frank Moorhouse and Jill Leach asserted that ‘the idea of the bronzed Aussie [was] entrenched in the psyche’ of Australians. … The sun, the sand, the beach and the body [were] at the heart of the Australian myth’ they argued — while Fiske, Hodge and Turner suggested that Surfers Paradise, together with Bondi, were the ‘beaches that most clearly [stood] for the dominant myth of the Australian beach’.7 Robert Drewe emphasised the importance of the beach in much of his writing. ‘The beach is … a place where people go to examine an old relationship that is going through troubles, re-examine their lives, fix things up that are fixable, or find the courage to go in a new direction’ he related.8 ‘When Australians run away, they always go to the coast’ he added. Drawing attention to the special bond that Australians have with the beach, Drewe stated: ‘Australians make or break romances at the beach, they marry and take honeymoons at the beach, they go on holidays with their children to the beach, and in vast numbers [they] retire by the sea’. He even commented that ‘many … `Australians have their first sexual experience on the coast’9 For many decades and still today, tourist promoters advertised that Queensland was Australia’s ‘Sunshine State’ and the State ‘to which sun-seekers come in winter’.10 As Bruce Waddell explained in his 1984 book, Queensland — The Sunshine State, most tourists would have ‘two main inducements’ for visiting Queensland — The Great Barrier Reef and the Gold Coast with ‘Surfers Paradise … the focal point’.11 In his book Swan Song: Reflections on Perth and Western Australia, George Seddon stated that promoters and residents of Perth frequently referred to their city’s ‘sunny’ climate, and as Affrica Taylor related in discussing Seddon’s views, visitors 190 AUSTRALIAN STUDIES consequently associated the city with cheerfulness, prosperity, the beach and breeziness.12 Similarly, the promoters of Queensland’s Gold Coast and especially Surfers Paradise, found this ‘sunny’ image both attractive and lucrative, with Rodney Hall relating in 1984 that ‘taking advantage of fine weather and magnificent surf beaches, … Surfers Paradise on the Gold Coast [had become] the most developed, colourful, commercial holiday area in Australia’.13 Davidson and Spearritt in Holiday Business associated tourism with consumption and fantasy, and explained that tourists frequently appreciated a staged or ‘make-believe’ circumstance over a real experience’.14 In 1990, Jeffrey Hopkins, in his article ‘West Edmonton Mall: Landscape of Myths and Elsewhereness’, stated that ‘sightseeing’ and ‘voyeurism’ were spatial strategies for some patrons, and particularly tourists, in the mall. Visiting was frequently ‘an attempted escape from everyday life’, he added.15 Gordon Waitt reinforced this view in his 1997 semiotic analysis of the images and meanings of the Australian Tourist Commission’s television advertisements. ‘Tourists are not motivated to travel by specific destination attributes, but rather by fulfilling psychological needs such as self-actualisation, social interaction, sexual arousal and excitement’, he declared.16 Publicity encouraged the public to associate the name ‘Surfers Paradise’ with images of days on golden beaches, of balmy nights wining and dining and of youthful exuberance. Romance and sexual license were strongly associated. ‘Like to gambol on the Gold Coast?’ asked the caption below an advertising photograph in 1969 of a group of young men and women running along the beach. For the low price of $109, the reader too could frolic in the shallows with attractive companions, the text implied — and although it referred to the Gold Coast, Surfers Paradise was unquestionably the most exciting place to visit.17 As Phillip Drew, author of the Coast Dwellers, argued, ‘the name ‘Surfers Paradise’ is as good an explanation as any for a city devoted to freedom, hedonism and sex by the sea’,18 while Gordon Waitt, in discussing the 1992 television advertisement Australia — Make it Happen to You, observed that the footage consisted of attractive young men and women on the EMBRACING THE MAKE-BELIEVE 191 beaches, in restaurants, at barbeques and in night clubs ‘chatting up’ one another. The accompanying verbal text related ‘It happened for me on the Gold Coast, It happened for her too …’.19 For holidaymakers to Surfers Paradise, the acquisition of a golden tan provided proof that the make-believe image of healthiness and sexual attractiveness that many Surfers Paradise visitors sought to achieve had a basis in actuality. As Fiske, Hodge and Turner explained, ‘with its connotation of leisure, money, [and] sophistication’, the tan had ‘a class dimension’. Aware of this, many visitors endeavoured to obtain a golden glow to heighten their sense of self-regard, make them more attractive to acquaintances and (hopefully) engender envy in their friends upon their return to the cooler southern states.20 Historically, Australians have relished the opportunity to visit the beach, but clearly, some locations are more popular than others. In the 1880s, Johann Meyer established a hotel in present day Surfers Paradise, but tourists arriving in Cobb and Co coaches via a punt across the Nerang River usually overlooked the almost deserted location, entering the beach and then travelling on the hard-packed sands to popular Coolangatta. Following the construction of substantial houses as well as a Post Office in the future Surfers Paradise neighbourhood, the first post-master, John Palmer named the fledgling coastal settlement, Elston, his wife’s maiden name.21 Sales of land at Elston, between the future Cavill and Elkhorn Avenues, took place in 1915, but demand was slight. Two years later, surveyor Thor Jensen and a friend stood on a dune overlooking the beach. ‘You know this place is a real surfers’ paradise’, the friend said. With the comment encapsulating his hopes for developing the area, Jensen and Real Estate Agent, Arthur Blackwood, bought the virtually uninhabited coastal land between present day Broadbeach and Surfers Paradise to subdivide and sell.
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